Mastery is a Mindset
What Ken Griffey Jr. — World Class at Baseball and Now Photography — Can Teach Us About Mastery
One of history’s greatest baseball players is now a world-class photographer.
While much of the world was rightfully locked in on Rory McIlroy’s Masters win, something else was quietly unfolding at Augusta:
Ken Griffey Jr.—the 13-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner, and Hall of Fame baseball player—was there too, capturing greatness from a new angle: as a credentialed photographer.
And his work was extraordinary.
It can teach us a lot about craft, mastery, and identity.
Griffey could be retired on a beach somewhere. Instead—as a way to stay connected to his kids as they played sports—he picked up a new passion and pursued it with humility and joy.
Maybe it’s hard to abandon the spotlight of sport.
Maybe he just loves the craft.
Whatever the reason, it’s a powerful reminder of what it means to grow. It’s proof that mastery isn’t a destination, it’s a mindset. A way of moving through the world.
Yes, talent matters. But so do curiosity, drive, and the willingness to keep showing up—traits every great athlete carries with them, no matter the arena.
Research shows that the more complex our sense of self—the more domains we explore, the more interests we have—the more resilient we become.
Self-complexity protects against burnout, helps us play to win instead of not to lose, and makes it easier to be bold. When your whole identity isn’t fused to one thing, you can take risks. You can fail. You can thrive. And you can learn from both.
Griffey’s photography is more than a hobby. It’s a metaphor for the excellence that is possible when we stay curious, keep learning, and remember we’re never just one thing.
There’s power in trying something new. There’s power in not clinging so tightly to who you have been that you miss who you could become. There’s power in staying open, curious, and willing to learn—no matter where you are in life.
It shows how you can pour yourself into something without becoming only that thing. You can be an athlete, a writer, a painter, and still hold space to be so much more.
When we diversify who we are, we gain resilience. The things we care about most will, at some point, break our hearts. But with a fuller sense of self, we’re more likely to recover, rebuild, and begin again.
What a beautiful example of growth.
Great life lesson. Excellence is a habit for Ken Giffery Jr.